While I have experience with coding, I just do not have time to dig my heels in and create what I’d like to.
I very much admire the PPC/Intel transition era of Apple. G4’s, G5’s and early transitional Intel models will always have a special place in my heart. This is why I want to see the lives of such machines extended. There are also countless PPC fans pushing the limits of the architecture and doing incredible things as a hobby.
I’d like to gauge how devs feel about being paid for their hobby.
I’ve always been able to relate to the feeling of ruining one’s hobby by trying to please somebody else but maybe somebody is willing.
I think it is fair that a person be rewarded for the time they invest in such things. I don’t expect everything for free and actually prefer paid apps etc. so long as the licensing is fair. I’m very willing to pay for custom apps, mods, patches etc. if the developer is willing to allow the end-product to be free and open to everybody else.
Recently, I had a discussion about making the Magic Trackpad work in Leopard with all multi-touch functions. It was made clear that there is a lot of underlying yarn to untangle to make this possible. It is doable but isn’t worth anybody’s investment considering it hasn’t been done.
In such a case that a driver could be developed to make the Magic Trackpad work with Leopard and/or even Tiger (the MBA was released with Tiger originally, so who knows) and work with both PowerPC and x86 architecture, I’d be willing to add my backing to the project so long as it is freely available to everybody. The problem is that my investment would be minuscule. For such a project, I may only be able to put in $200 on completion and I believe a developer’s time is certainly worth more than that. So where does additional funding come from?
Something like OCLP should have tens-of-thousands backing it, for instance, all things being fair.
I feel similarly about many other projects. How about Graphics drivers to add support to older Macs? Modern web browsers, NIC’s, USB versions, RAW support, controller device compatibility for old Macs, bringing Rosetta (1) to later Mac OS versions, etc.?
I feel that if somebody were to, say, open a GoFundMe for old Apple development to keep the hobby fresh for all of us, I’d be a consistent backer.
I know of Classilla and TenFourFox etc. but IMO apps like this are tacky and obviously just “good enough” to pass. Any port in a storm, they say. I’d like to help induce production of nicely polished tools on the level of Apple in their prime.
I know I’m dreaming but here’s my shot.
I very much admire the PPC/Intel transition era of Apple. G4’s, G5’s and early transitional Intel models will always have a special place in my heart. This is why I want to see the lives of such machines extended. There are also countless PPC fans pushing the limits of the architecture and doing incredible things as a hobby.
I’d like to gauge how devs feel about being paid for their hobby.
I’ve always been able to relate to the feeling of ruining one’s hobby by trying to please somebody else but maybe somebody is willing.
I think it is fair that a person be rewarded for the time they invest in such things. I don’t expect everything for free and actually prefer paid apps etc. so long as the licensing is fair. I’m very willing to pay for custom apps, mods, patches etc. if the developer is willing to allow the end-product to be free and open to everybody else.
Recently, I had a discussion about making the Magic Trackpad work in Leopard with all multi-touch functions. It was made clear that there is a lot of underlying yarn to untangle to make this possible. It is doable but isn’t worth anybody’s investment considering it hasn’t been done.
In such a case that a driver could be developed to make the Magic Trackpad work with Leopard and/or even Tiger (the MBA was released with Tiger originally, so who knows) and work with both PowerPC and x86 architecture, I’d be willing to add my backing to the project so long as it is freely available to everybody. The problem is that my investment would be minuscule. For such a project, I may only be able to put in $200 on completion and I believe a developer’s time is certainly worth more than that. So where does additional funding come from?
Something like OCLP should have tens-of-thousands backing it, for instance, all things being fair.
I feel similarly about many other projects. How about Graphics drivers to add support to older Macs? Modern web browsers, NIC’s, USB versions, RAW support, controller device compatibility for old Macs, bringing Rosetta (1) to later Mac OS versions, etc.?
I feel that if somebody were to, say, open a GoFundMe for old Apple development to keep the hobby fresh for all of us, I’d be a consistent backer.
I know of Classilla and TenFourFox etc. but IMO apps like this are tacky and obviously just “good enough” to pass. Any port in a storm, they say. I’d like to help induce production of nicely polished tools on the level of Apple in their prime.
I know I’m dreaming but here’s my shot.